Author/Authors :
Jianghang Wu and Maochang Cui، نويسنده , , EDUARDO ZORITA، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The relationship between monthly sea-level data measured at stations located along the Chinese
coast and concurrent large-scale atmospheric forcing in the period 1960–1990 is examined. It
is found that sea-level varies quite coherently along the whole coast, despite the geographical
extension of the station set. A canonical correlation analysis between sea-level and sea-level
pressure (SLP) indicates that a great part of the sea-level variability can be explained by the
action of the wind stress on the ocean surface. The relationship between sea-level and sea-level
pressure is analyzed separately for the summer and winter half-years. In winter, one factor
affecting sea-level variability at all stations is the SLP contrast between the continent and the
Pacific Ocean, hence the intensity of the winter Monsoon circulation. Another factor that affects
coherently all stations is the intensity of the zonal circulation at mid-latitudes. In the summer
half year, on the other hand, the influence of SLP on sea-level is spatially less coherent: the
stations in the Yellow Sea are affected by a more localized circulation anomaly pattern, whereas
the rest of the stations is more directly connected to the intensity of the zonal circulation. Based
on this analysis, statistical models (different for summer and winter) to hindcast coastal sealevel
anomalies from the large-scale SLP field are formulated. These models have been tested
by fitting their internal parameters in a test period and reproducing reasonably the sea-level
evolution in an independent period. These statistical models are also used to estimate the
contribution of the changes of the atmospheric circulation on sea-level along the Chinese coast
in an altered climate. For this purpose the ouput of 150 year-long experiment with the coupled
ocean-atmosphere model ECHAM1-LSG has been analyzed, in which the atmospheric concentration
of greenhouse gases was continuously increased from 1940 until 2090, according to the
Scenario A projection of the Intergovermental Panel on Climate Change. In this experiment
the meridional (zonal) circulation relevant for sea-level tends to become weaker (stronger) in
the winter half year and stronger (weaker) in summer. The estimated contribution of this
atmospheric circulation changes to coastal sea-level is of the order of a few centimeters at the
end of the integration, being in winter negative in the Yellow Sea and positive in the China Sea
with opposite signs in the summer half-year